Here’s the latest on Bill C-3 and Canadian citizenship.
Short answer
- Bill C-3, an act to amend the Citizenship Act, passed Parliament in late 2025 and received Royal Assent, removing the first-generation limit on citizenship by descent and introducing a “substantial connection to Canada” requirement for transmission of citizenship to children born abroad. It took effect in late 2025/early 2026 as implementation details were published and the government prepared the transition.
Key points
What has been published by authorities
- Parliament’s summary and government communications explain the rationale and main changes, including the removal of the first-generation limit and the “substantial connection” concept, with timelines and transition steps.[1][8][9]
- News coverage and immigration outlets in 2025 highlighted that Bill C-3 passed third reading and received Royal Assent, with details about restoration for lost Canadians and new rules for transmission of citizenship.[3][6][2]
Illustrative example
- A Canadian citizen born abroad to Canadian parents in the second generation could pass citizenship to a child born abroad under the new rules if the parent can show substantial connection to Canada (lifetime presence of 1,095 days). This reflects the bill’s shift toward inclusivity while maintaining a demonstrated link to Canada.
Notes
- If you or someone you know might be affected, you should monitor official sources for finalized implementation guidelines and application steps. The government has indicated it would publish implementation details and transitional provisions as the act came into effect, with timelines extending into early 2026.[4][9][3]
Citations
- Bill C-3 summary and key changes from official and parliamentary sources.[1]
- Reported passage, royal assent, and restoration provisions for Lost Canadians.[2]
- Analysis and timelines noting extended implementation window and 1,095-day presence rule.[3][4]
- Government page with formal updates on the bill’s status and anticipated effective date.[9]
If you’d like, I can tailor this to a specific situation (e.g., you or a family member born abroad, or a child born abroad) and outline concrete steps you should take next, along with any current forms or contact points from IRCC.
Sources
Before Bill C-3 came into effect, Canada’s Citizenship Act limited the passing on of citizenship to the first-generation for people born or adopted abroad. This meant that a Canadian citizen could only pass on citizenship to or access a direct grant of citizenship for a child born or adopted outside Canada if the parent was either born or naturalized in Canada before the child’s birth or adoption.
www.canada.caThe proposed law could grant a bunch of people automatic citizenship. 🇨🇦
www.narcity.comBill C-3, passed by Parliament and given Royal Assent on November 20, 2025, removes the first‑generation limit on citizenship by descent. It provides automatic, retroactive restoration for people affected by the 2009 rule and for those who lost citizenship under old retention provisions. Going forward, a Canadian parent born abroad will be able to transmit citizenship to children born or adopted overseas if the parent shows 1,095 days of lifetime physical presence in Canada. The government...
www.visaverge.comCanada delays Citizenship Act update to Jan 20, 2026. Learn how Bill C-3 removes the First-Generation Limit and expands citizenship rights.
comebien.coSOCI – Bill C-3 – November 17, 2025
www.canada.caThe current Citizenship Act limits citizenship by descent to the first generation born abroad, meaning Canadians who were born outside Canada and acquired
immigrationnewscanada.caResponds to court ruling on citizenship: The bill directly addresses the Ontario Superior Court's December 2023 ruling, which found Canada's citizenship law inconsistent and two-tiered, and aims to rectify this by the November 20 deadline. Extends citizenship by descent: Bill C-3 extends automatic citizenship to children born abroad to Canadian parents, including "lost Canadians" and their descendants, ensuring fairness and upholding charter mobility and equality rights. Requires substantial...
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